* Countries, investors to raise $200 billion by end-2015
* Alliance seeks to halt forest losses by 2030
* Looks to increase chances for global climate deal in 2015
A United Nations summit on
climate change agreed on Tuesday to widen the use of renewable energy and raise
billions of dollars in aid for developing countries in an effort to increase
the prospects for a wide-ranging deal to slow global warming.
The non-binding initiatives were set by various coalitions
of governments, multinational companies, cities, financial groups, investors,
environmental organizations and other groups.
The targets are meant to help prepare a 200-nation summit in
Paris in late 2015 to finalize a deal to slow rising greenhouse gas emissions.
Until now, work has been slow with many countries more focused on improving
economic growth and creating jobs.
Governments and investors said they would raise more than
$200 billion in climate financing by the end of 2015, including $30 billion in
green bonds by commercial banks and $100 billion from a group of development
banks.
"This will serve as a catalyst in finalizing a
universal and meaningful agreement at Paris on climate change in 2015,"
Ban said of the cash.
The United Nations said in a statement that pledges of
financial support would give a "significant boost" to a promise by
rich nations in 2009 to raise $100 billion a year by 2020 from all sources to
help poor countries shift to renewable energy and adapt to heatwaves, droughts
and rising seas.
Separately, an alliance of about 30 countries including the
United States and a coalition of multinational companies set a goal of halving
losses of forests by 2020 and halting losses by 2030. If fully implemented,
this would stave off between 4.5 billion and 8.8 billion tonnes of carbon
dioxide emissions a year, equivalent to emissions by all the world's one
billion cars.
Trees soak up carbon dioxide from the air as they grow and
release it when they die. Burning of forests from the Amazon to the Congo,
mainly to make way for farmland, accounts for up to a fifth of all greenhouse
gases generated by human sources.
Companies including Walmart, Unilever, Wilmar International,
General Mills, Asia Pulp and Paper and Nestle, many non-governmental organizations
and indigenous peoples' groups signed up for the plan.
The declaration is backed by more than $1 billion from
countries including Britain, Germany and Norway. Norway said it would provide
up to $300 million to Peru and $150 million to Liberia.
"The actions agreed today will reduce poverty, enhance
food security, improve the rule of law, secure the rights of indigenous peoples
and benefit communities around the world," Ban said.
Among initiatives to curb the use of fossil fuel, one
project would raise the share of renewable energy used in power generation in
19 countries in eastern and southern Africa to 40 percent by 2030 from 10
percent.
Another alliance of major nations and energy groups
including ENI of Italy and Southwestern Energy in the United States signed up
to do more to curb emissions of methane, a powerful greenhouse gas.
Companies including McDonald's and Kellogg committed to
"climate-smart agriculture" to protect farmers from global warming
and to improve crop yields to feed the world's rising population.
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